Sometimes an interview can feel like an interrogation. For instance, if you have a run-in with the police, they are generally not interested in starting a conversation with you. They have questions, and they expect answers. The roles of interviewer and interviewee are stable.
However, sometimes an interview can feel more like a conversation, with both participants asking and answering questions based on each others responses. In essence, it turns into a dialogue with genuine give and take. Here's an example of such an interview:
Osman Can Yerebakan with Lorna Simpson in the Brooklyn Rail.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Last Words
Here we are. This is the last time we will meet together. I'd like to thank each of you for a rewarding semester of teaching. I hope eve...

-
Your final paper of the semester will make an argument about a particular and specific debate in contemporary art culture. Should artists be...
-
A couple of weeks ago, Micahel Loria, an arts journalist writing for the Washington City Paper, published an extended piece about his work a...
-
First Year Students! Sending you a reminder that you need to sign up for your first-year portfolio presentation. The sign-up is live. Bel...
No comments:
Post a Comment